Steelers' voice signs off on careerBy Chris Colston, Sports Weekly
"A yawping, squawking instrument that can clear arenas" is how The New York Times described it. The Washington Post said it "makes sandpaper seem like Charmin."

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette called it "a gargle-with-gravel thing that clangs of vaudevillian schtick."

The Associated Press said, "Think of a car careening to a screeching stop."

It is the voice of a beloved legend, a city icon, a man who never played professional sports yet they made bobbleheads of him anyway. They're talking about Myron Cope.

Cope definately has a unique voice and style that not everyone can appreciate unless you have a real love for the sport, and for its icons and history. Cope is no doubt and icon in broadcasting history.